By the way, list members, I want to emphasize that my remarks and
observations were based on something that happened some 30 years ago and do
not reflect the current administration nor staff at the present day State
Library.  They should not be held accountable for actions taken by a less
informed staff of yesteryear.  As someone who uses the State Library
constantly, I rate the staff there as A+++ and several of them are my best
friends.  I do not want to suggest that the same conditions exist.
don


> From: Don Rittner <[log in to unmask]>
> Reply-To: "A LISTSERV list for discussions pertaining to New York State
> history." <[log in to unmask]>
> Date: Thu, 1 Nov 2001 12:43:39 -0500
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: Question RE: the private sale of public records
>
> Excuse me Mr Carsaro but I was standing there and watching it in real time.
> My memory is very good.  It is NOT secondary rumor nor hearsay. It is true I
> am not a high and mighty librarian, simply a lowly historian.
>
> BUT for the record. I was invited into the facility by a scientist of the
> State Museum Science Service who did NOT enjoy the fact that much of the
> material (that he considered important in his field) held in that facility
> was being tossed. I'm not blind, nor a liar, as you suggest.  I did not make
> any comments on the quality of the material, nor that it was "archival
> material," but only what I saw by the invited scientist. Perhaps the
> material was not deemed important by your staff and was ordered destroyed.
> I do not know.  I only know what I saw and the response to my inquiry.  And
> since I know what you look like I can inform the listmembers it was not you
> who made the statement to me, nor did I see you at any time I was there (for
> at least two hours on two successive days).
>
> Unless you oversaw every employee who was moving stuff, and was present at
> every minute of the move, I suggest you switch to decaf.  No one was
> accusing you of anything, but I do not take to be called a liar very well.
> As much as I like the State Library, not everyone there are angels. I could
> give a very detailed list of material (since both I and the scientist wrote
> it down and I have it right in front of me), but I suggest you leave it at
> that unless you want to wring out some very dirty laundry here.  I certainly
> am not going to deny what I saw with my own eyes. Your call.
>
> Your old stomping grounds is not without fault.
>
> For anyone on this list to pretend that this discipline operates now or in
> the past without error is naive to say the least.  There already has been
> plenty of discussion here to lay that lofty pretense to rest.  However, if
> these kinds of errors are not going to repeated, they must be brought to
> light rather than cover them up or pretend they never happened.
>
> my two cents...
>
>
> don
>
>> From: James Corsaro <[log in to unmask]>
>> Reply-To: "A LISTSERV list for discussions pertaining to New York State
>> history." <[log in to unmask]>
>> Date: Wed, 31 Oct 2001 16:21:44 EST
>> To: [log in to unmask]
>> Subject: Re: Question RE: the private sale of public records
>>
>> The statement from the writer of the e-mail concerning the "dumping of
>> manuscripts" by the NY State Library is,quite simply, totally false. One
>> notes that the writer does not provide a scintilla of evidence, but only
>> remembers a story from the past (somewhere in his/her memory bank, one
>> guesses). I was the Senior Librarian at the time of the move of the State
>> Library's manuscripts collections and I can state emphatically that no
>> manuscripts of any sort, time, place or whatever were ever put into the
>> trash. Let the writer of that e-mail provide some specific examples of proof
>> if such remarks are going to be made via a large listserve such as this. The
>> writer of the e-mail, who may even consider him/herself an historican should
>> know that when one makes broad statements without providing any proof, anyone
>> reading/hearing those statements can dismiss them as pure rhetoric without
>> any proof. One of the parts of e-mail that I find pretty reprehensible is the
>> tendency of writers to make broad generalizations without proof and then
>> expect their readers to believe the tripe. I do not consider myself an
>> historian; rather I am a librarian and archivist and over many years at the
>> State Library I added tens of thousands of archival documents, manuscripts,
>> books and other material. I did not and I know that no one else put any
>> manuscripts in a dump at the time of the move to the Cultural Education
>> Center.
>>
>> James Corsaro
>> Retired Associate Librarian, Manuscripts and Special Collections.
>>
>